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— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) March 11, 2021
Missed this last night, but definitely π: Hours after @TexasGOP vice chair @CatParksTX demands the @AllenWest-led party quit Gab, @GovAbbott posts vid saying "anti-Semitic platforms like Gab have no place in TX & certainly do not rep. TX values" #txlege https://t.co/S5zrhvi4dS
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) March 11, 2021
- A bonfire
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 10, 2021
- Shelley Luther
- Liability waivers for illness
- Moment of silence for the dead
- Hand sanitizer
- Sushi https://t.co/liBzppABXK
Six potential challengers to Gov. Greg Abbott in the 2022 Republican primary https://t.co/i9liqyzxrY
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) March 9, 2021
ππππ© https://t.co/WDZjnj7Ws4
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 10, 2021
He'd beat Abbott. Question is, would he beat him in the primary or the general?
— Chris Mosser πΊπΈ (@ChrisMosser) March 11, 2021
π Pay attention, #Texas. Matthew McConaughey is a Trumpublican. The only way him running is a good thing is if he does so as an indy, the freak right vote splits, and @GovAbbott gets tossed. #TXLege #TX2022 https://t.co/DNBPB37gKv
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 11, 2021
https://t.co/6bc2cUCph3 pic.twitter.com/9Ebs6YaTUf
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 11, 2021
“It’s a very honorable consideration.” - Matthew @McConaughey on whether he'll run for governor of Texas pic.twitter.com/7rtiDzJYy2
— TODAY (@TODAYshow) March 12, 2021
Don’t Be A Maskhole! https://t.co/UqdzEnXS8w
— Tacho Medellin (@2centavos) March 10, 2021
No, it's not your 'constitutional right' to refuse to follow a business' mask policy https://t.co/iKpwuUCwU2 #HTownRush #KHOU
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) March 10, 2021
From the people who brought you no water and no electricity: no masks.
— Mayor Adler | π·wear a mask. (@MayorAdler) March 10, 2021
Read my statement and continue to #MaskUpATX: https://t.co/PqvrFBsDq4 pic.twitter.com/N00c2AbBYh
Quite an exchange: @DanPatrick: "Why didn't you let the market be the market?"
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) March 12, 2021
PUC Chair: "The market was killing people in their homes...that's why."#TxLege
The $16 billion number used by @DanPatrick to rally the Texas Senate against the Public Utility Commission is not correct, by a lot, per the PUC Chair. Texas House Speaker @DadePhelan has argued lawmakers should wait until the picture is clearer before taking swift action #Txlege https://t.co/1GhL1JJsuX
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) March 11, 2021
This bit of hypocrisy hadn't yet come to mind: The @DanPatrick prioritizing dealing with "censorship" over things said on social media is the same Dan Patrick who instructed Texas Senate staff to ban a reporter over something said on social media: https://t.co/I4dTYMVhhl #TxLege
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) March 10, 2021
I don't like Ted Cruz and spam. https://t.co/mRge1yZOxO
— Charles Turner: Still more Children Being Caged (@MitchelCCharles) March 11, 2021
The context here is that as Texas attorney general, Cornyn gave an award to a crooked cop later exposed by Gupta for framing 38 mostly black Texans for crimes they didn’t commit, and he has not only not forgiven her for it, he thinks he can pretend it never happened. https://t.co/42no6vRn4Z
— Adam Serwer π (@AdamSerwer) March 12, 2021
Texas, your Senator is not too bright. Eligible vs vaccinated. Are you really this dense, John Cornyn, or just on Twitter?? https://t.co/IxdssfMx1y
— Mom,Veteran,Consumer (@Nikluk) March 12, 2021
A transgendered soldier is more reliable than an F-35, @JohnCornyn. #YouPlayedYourself https://t.co/bAp9Xfaj60
— Forever in debt to your priceless advice. (@PDiddie) March 11, 2021
Little Gov @DanPatrick says Texas has spent nearly $1 billion on border security since he & Gov @GregAbbott_TX were elected in '15 "because the federal government's not doing their job." Those years cover the entire Trump Administration, a few weeks of Biden #TxLege #BorderCrisis
— Scott Braddock (@scottbraddock) March 10, 2021
In South Texas, property owners in the border wall's path are still waiting on concrete action from @POTUS.
— Gus Bova (@gusbova) March 10, 2021
In many cases, their land has been tied up in court now for months or years. They can't invest or plan.
As one put it: “I can’t breathe yet" https://t.co/9EfOWUTEgH
Anti-#immigrant hysteria could have a shelf life, @BakerCtrUSMEX Director @PayanTony said. “#Immigration has been very good to #Texas … I think #Texans value #immigrants from Dallas down to the Rio Grande Valley, from El Paso to Houston." https://t.co/nELDWo8qwW #border #txlege
— Rice University News (@RiceUNews) March 10, 2021
Homeland Security Secretary Mayorkas visited South #Texas migrant tent city, child detention facilities https://t.co/bS8WnQ9PQi pic.twitter.com/lkEMCl7ZWb
— KXAN News (@KXAN_News) March 8, 2021
Deeply reported series about a company paid millions to provide affordable housing but leaves tenants in filthy, mold-infested apartments. Prepared to be grossed out. https://t.co/XhTv5vDsJV via @HoustonChron
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) March 11, 2021
A report released Tuesday by a University of Texas at Austin committee found that the controversial alma mater, “The Eyes of Texas” debuted at a minstrel show where students likely wore blackface. https://t.co/qScQwUYvAQ
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 9, 2021
Who tonight cast the one single Democratic vote against the Protect the Right to Organize Act, the single most important piece of labor law reform in 70 years? It's...@RepCuellar of South Texas.
— DSA πΉ (@DemSocialists) March 10, 2021
Grieder: Now is not the time for the #TxLege to relitigate the 'bathroom wars' of 2017 "in light of recent events in this state, perhaps our leaders should consider a temporary pass on the culture wars, in order to focus on real crises." https://t.co/Ei8Qx3Setv via @houstonchron
— Lou Weaver (he/him) (@louweaver) March 10, 2021
It looks like the Census Bureau is on track to release the number of congressional seats each state will have by April 30, though the block-level data used to draw maps won’t come until the fall (~Sept 30). #fairmaps https://t.co/RlPq6bB0AM
— Michael Li ζδΉζ¨Έ (@mcpli) March 9, 2021
Texas bill would raise minimum teacher pay to $70,000 a year https://t.co/DibwdWxccB #HTownRush #KHOU
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) March 12, 2021
Texas Republican Files Bill to Punish Abortion with the Death Penalty https://t.co/3JlhGTagqE pic.twitter.com/W5Yl37RuSA
— Hemant Mehta (@hemantmehta) March 10, 2021
After record voter turnout in Texas, Republican lawmakers have filed a slate of bills that could limit voting access in the state – including a law that would eliminate Harris County’s new 24-hour voting locations. https://t.co/9KnkKmJdLr
— Houston Public Media (@HoustonPubMedia) March 8, 2021
Few of the bills Texas lawmakers filed in the aftermath of the widespread power outages seek to reform problems that the storm exposed in the way natural gas is produced, delivered and used to make power. #TXlege https://t.co/TbMK54vZ1f
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 9, 2021
With no long lines, no traffic, and no parties, South by Southwest is going to look a lot this different this year. Here's how organizers pulled it off. https://t.co/6JxK8mcwXW
— Texas Monthly (@TexasMonthly) March 11, 2021
What’s going on in Fredericksburg, TX.... π pic.twitter.com/0RdCMD0BpQ
— Coyote (@SpursCoyote) March 8, 2021
On this day, March 7, in 1901, the Texas Legislature adopted the bluebonnet as the state flower. The flower's popular name derives from its resemblance to a sunbonnet. In the 1930s, the state began a highway beautification program to spread bluebonnets across Texas. #khou pic.twitter.com/qdtPrxBRCo
— The Bishop (@BillBishopKHOU) March 7, 2021
Tuesday afternoon, on Texas Independence Day, #ihateithere started trending on Twitter, fueled by Texans who, yet again this year, were wondering whether our proud state had lost its ever-loving mind. https://t.co/9qwh3P4w0l
— Houston Chronicle (@HoustonChron) March 7, 2021
Opinion | Living in Texas right now feels like an exercise in survival - The Washington Post https://t.co/7sEaJxneOj
— Clay Jenkins (@JudgeClayJ) March 6, 2021
Texas Gov. Abbott stalled federal offer to test migrants then blamed them for spreading Covid - CNNPolitics from @priscialva https://t.co/2QUNF7SdWx
— Kyung Lah (@KyungLahCNN) March 5, 2021
A Mexican restaurant in Texas kept its mask rule. People threatened to call ICE on the staff. https://t.co/t13L39JGed
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) March 7, 2021
The winter storm left dozens of Texans dead, millions without power and nearly 15 million with water issues.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 5, 2021
It could be the costliest disaster in state history — potentially exceeding the $125 billion in damage from Hurricane Harvey. https://t.co/Z0Qz2AtHOJ
When the Texas electric grid failed in February, plunging Texans into dark and freeze, Bank of America's energy trading group sent power prices up by 10,000%, selling power for $9,000 a megawatt-hour and making
— Alfons LΓ³pez Tena (@alfonslopeztena) March 6, 2021
hundreds of millions in trading revenuehttps://t.co/a33xVHBWmM
The writers on this season of Texas have gone too far
— Drew Jones (@drewkjones) March 2, 2021
Texas’ utility regulator had an opportunity today to eliminate some of the $16 billion that the state’s grid operator erroneously overcharged power companies during last month’s deadly winter storm.
— Texas Tribune (@TexasTribune) March 5, 2021
The Public Utility Commission chose not to do so. https://t.co/k2E7zjprpH
Texas among the worst in the US in vaccine distribution https://t.co/3BPnudiiKy
— KVUE News (@KVUE) March 4, 2021
Texas 100% = Governor Abbott looking out for himself
— Stand For Better (@StandForBetter) March 3, 2021
Trump was the poster child of not giving a d**mn about endangering the population through reckless behavior
Abbott is no different..
Texas Spring Break will be like a Trump Super Spreader event on steroids.#COVIDIOT pic.twitter.com/0Mdvg0S41l
Texas to get $27 billion from $1.9 trillion COVID relief bill https://t.co/TteCNck1FC
— Dallas Morning News (@dallasnews) March 6, 2021
Just in: Texas will receive more than 1 million doses next week, including 245K Johnson & Johnson vaccines. pic.twitter.com/7Qk5JxOm4U
— Jesus JimΓ©nez (@jesus_jimz) March 5, 2021
"When you compare efficacy data, Pfizer ranks at the highest with 95 percent effectiveness in preventing COVID-19, compared to Moderna at 94 percent. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine was found to be 66 percent effective at preventing moderate to severe cases of COVID-19, and 85 percent effective if disease is critical. The concern has been whether the current vaccines will hold effectiveness against new COVID-19 variants, including the UK, New York, California, South Africa and Brazil variants.
"This vaccine is still effective against all these variants, as well as the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines," Dr. Yancey reassured. "If we can get people vaccinated as quickly as we can, the virus will stop spreading."
Gov. Abbott to announce bill prohibiting social media companies from censoring viewpoints https://t.co/4yHePWYkV3 pic.twitter.com/s4xabeW0vc
— News 4 San Antonio (@News4SA) March 5, 2021
The 43rd Texas prison employee has died of covid -- less than two months after she started working for the agency. pic.twitter.com/QGEWE1kVb1
— Keri Blakinger (@keribla) March 7, 2021
FBI: More arrests coming in North Texas for those involved in Capitol riot https://t.co/M9b2v4d9Ue
— Fort Worth Star-Telegram (@startelegram) March 6, 2021
An internet sleuth who has no relationship with the latest suspect was able to identify the northwest Houston man, the investigators said. https://t.co/DHajAhRka5
— ABC13 Houston (@abc13houston) March 6, 2021
Mayor Sylvester Turner: "No evictions should be taking place in the city of Houston for failure to pay rent through the end of this month."
— Jen Rice (@jen_rice_) March 5, 2021
Also Houston: 618 evictions filed within the city since the grace period started on 2/17. 576 cases on Harris County dockets next week. https://t.co/3fDI2yCUET
“Black, brown and other communities of color, alongside the white poor, continue to bear the brunt of environmental and political storms that cast the spotlight on American democracy’s tragic underbelly.” https://t.co/FTJW3YACFZ
— Texas Standard (@TexasStandard) March 5, 2021
A great day helping @DentonLeft, @DentonTenants, and @DfwAntifa serve a great turnout of folx. pic.twitter.com/xs8117Znp8
— Elm Fork John Brown Gun Club (@EFJBGC) March 7, 2021
The field is set for the #TX06 special election: 23 candidates join the race to replace late U.S. Rep. Ron Wright https://t.co/419nqHLYPG via @TexasTribune
— Kirk A. Bado (@kirk_bado) March 4, 2021
Nearly two dozen candidates filed for the special election to succeed the late U.S. Rep. Ron Wright (R-Arlington) in a district that has become increasingly competitive in general elections over the past decade. President Trump carried the district by 3 points over Joe Biden in 2020, and the average Republican won the district by just over 6 points. Trump won the district by 9 points over Hillary Clinton in 2016, and Mitt Romney carried it over President Obama by 17 points in 2012.
This is not a general election, and turnout is expected to fall well short of the 69% of registered voters who came to the polls in November. The 2018 special election for CD27, which was held in June, drew 15% of the number of voters as in the 2016 general election. A similar result for CD6 would result in around 55K votes cast. All candidates run on the same ballot regardless of party, and the top two candidates advance to a runoff, regardless of party, if no one secures a majority vote. Given the number of Republicans (11) and Democrats (10) in the race, a runoff is almost certain. The question is, what will be the partisan makeup of the runoff?
The last time a field this size ran in a special election was 1993, when 24 candidates filed to win the unexpired term of former U.S. Sen. Lloyd Bentsen (D). There were 10 Republicans, five Democrats including the appointed incumbent, one Libertarian, six independents and two other minor party candidates. The Republicans collectively received 58.2% of the vote to the Democrats’ collective 40.5%, and the minor party and independent candidates combined for 1.3%. Eighteen of the candidates each received less than 1% of the vote, 16 of which received less than 0.5%. That left three Republicans and three Democrats with more than 1% of the vote.
Sid Miller, who's been building contrasts w/ Abbott ahead of 2022 primary, releases plan to reform Texas electric grid, complete w/ campaign-made mini-site: https://t.co/HEgKVcQmkw
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) March 5, 2021
How Gov. Abbott's attack on "defunding the police" has divided TX Dems https://t.co/Zg0ody527r w/ @jamesrhenson via @TexasTribune "While 41% of white, liberal Dems say that they would decrease police spending in their communities, only 24% of non-white Dems say the same." #txlege
— Joshua M. Blank (@JoshuaMBlank) March 5, 2021
Texas is ready! It's time to legalize adult-use recreational marijuana. For medical treatment. For jobs. For criminal justice reform. For statewide revenue. I will lead a statewide effort to make this happen. RT if you are with me. #JaworskiforTXAG #LegalizeIt pic.twitter.com/BztqjLVCg6
— Joe Jaworski (@JaworskiForTX) March 5, 2021
Every year, Texas arbitrarily throws out ballots on the basis of signature matching. They throw em out, don't notify the voter in time, and disenfranchise thousands of voters on a whim.
— MOVE Texas (@MOVE_texas) March 4, 2021
That's not right, so we sued them. #txlege https://t.co/1ckFbDBbHE
We're thrilled that the efforts we've made with our friends at @MOVE_texas resulted in first-time online voter registration for 500,000 Texans, including youth, people of color, and low-income Texans. Access must expand- every Texan deserves this option! https://t.co/RkrlCQsjeN
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) March 5, 2021
A Deep Dive on Texas and the Latino Electorate, featuring Chuck Rocha and Cecilia BallΓ https://t.co/bty4ft4PwK @TheLBJSchool @UT_MALS @UT_DDCE @LatinostudiesUT @TexasLULAC @LonghornLULAC #Texas #Election2021 #latinos #TxEd @TexasMonthly @ceciliaballi @utrgv @UTRGVNewsroom pic.twitter.com/E1FyD0YtS7
— Angela Valenzuela (@vlnzl) March 3, 2021
One Texas oil and gas company left the state responsible for almost $10 million after its 2019 bankruptcy. https://t.co/IzaMFaXtcg
— Texas Observer (@TexasObserver) March 8, 2021
#Exxon’s resistance to properly valuing its reserves and assets has been the focus of multiple recent fraud allegations against the company. https://t.co/FHyCYJaASk
— DeSmog (@DeSmogBlog) March 2, 2021
— Environment Texas (@EnvironmentTex) March 4, 2021
7 hours later and Butadiene levels are spiking right by the intersection of Loop 610 and SH 225 #HouNewshttps://t.co/6Bz0g1FEjj
— Any Major Dude (@tex1sam) March 5, 2021
BREAKING NEWS: #whitemanlostintexas is trending after internet sensation and egg consumer, Wayne R. Adiotv (@wayneradiotv) was seen in terrifying footage of 'escaping captivity'. Friends and loved ones implore everyone to point and laugh. pic.twitter.com/oIcjtnhWZi
— πΎPochiyakiπ‘ (@Pochiyaki) March 7, 2021
LUBBOCK, Texas — Texas Governor Greg Abbott said Monday that he would visit Lubbock and make a statewide announcement at 1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
— The Bingham Group, LLC (@binghamgp) March 1, 2021
@GovAbbott #txlege https://t.co/w2wzUuqRnY
This announcement is coming five days after @GovAbbott said he was looking at when to end all statewide orders on COVID-19 and that he'd have announcements "pretty soon": https://t.co/jHHGSNe6Mu #txlege
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) March 1, 2021
Famous surgeon Atul Gawande opposes relaxing of Covid restrictions: 'We haven't even come down below the surge last summer' https://t.co/RTnNExhltY #txlege @GovAbbott @GregAbbott_TX
— Dick Lavine (@dlavine) March 2, 2021
The Republic of Texas was only in existence for a short period, but it is a unique history... pic.twitter.com/Tp9exDzOcH
— Patricia Sharkey (@PatriciaShark11) March 2, 2021
*Limited Ticket Alert* Houston Press Tacolandia Taco Stop tickets are selling fast because who could resist 25+ tacos & drinks for less than $30? Get your tickets while you can here → https://t.co/bABGN4us9V
— Houston Press (@HPStreet) February 25, 2021
Dallas Police Chief Eddie Garcia is proposing that officers no longer cite or arrest most people who are found with small amounts of marijuana. https://t.co/PU45Bmccbx
— NBC DFW (@NBCDFW) March 1, 2021
Paxton’s Circus Clown Show returns home: he’s filed suit to remove San Antonio’s Police Chief from office. Are you kidding me? Blocking Texans, fleeing the state to stay warm, golfing with Trump and now meddling in local law enforcement. What’s next? https://t.co/TZtJ5UEvhV
— Joe Jaworski (@JaworskiForTX) February 28, 2021
Federal judge rules two HPD officers must stand trial on assault and battery, excessive force charges
— KHOU 11 News Houston (@KHOU) March 2, 2021
https://t.co/jtwpLXSEhZ#khou #hounews pic.twitter.com/Jey81VgLtt
2nd Fort Worth police officer fired over ‘racially insensitive’ posting on social media https://t.co/uVeXbcGwjc
— Donald Pedersen (@DonaldP28785881) March 1, 2021
We have found the voter fraud. It’s the GOP.
— Hoodlum πΊπΈ (@NotHoodlum) March 1, 2021
Republican Judge Tomas ‘Tommy’ Ramirez III was arrested along with three other people on 150 counts of voter fraud. They’re accused of multiple charges including ballot harvesting at nursing homes in South Texas. pic.twitter.com/Fb3uuyzCxm
Just Liberty is asking the #txlege to ↑ food budgets to make prisons healthier, safer places. https://t.co/NWtijrtW55
— Grits for Breakfast (@Grits4Breakfast) March 2, 2021
Dostoevsky said “the degree of civilization in a society can be judged by entering its prisons.” What judgment does Texas prison food deserve?
The bills to punish cities for divesting from police are already rolling in. HB 2362 was filed today. And Lt. Gov. Patrick announced that SB 23 would do the same in the Senate. Texans deserve robust public healthcare, not status quo, racist policing. https://t.co/srLJtwjyNP
— Texas Civil Rights Project (@TXCivilRights) February 26, 2021
After multiple calls for her resignation, @PUCtx Chair DeAnn Walker stepped down amid the #TexasFreeze fallout. Walker was appointed to the position in 2017 by @GovAbbott and testified in front of #txlege hearings on the blackouts last week.https://t.co/eA775mKsPd
— The Texan (@TheTexanNews) March 1, 2021
Two bills filed by @RepMattSchaefer (R-Tyler) would have prohibited Governor Greg Abbott's mask orders in the first place. If passed, his bills would end all current state and local mask mandates.https://t.co/bnjhV2N41Z
— The Texan (@TheTexanNews) March 1, 2021
Texas Republicans just filed a bill to make it illegal to vote at night. This is in direct response to efforts by @HarrisVotes to make sure that ALL Texans, including first responders, medical professionals, and shift workers, can vote at a time convenient for them. #txlege pic.twitter.com/TtRKCqfqtd
— Chris Hollins (@CGHollins) February 25, 2021
A message to my fellow #Texans, this is what #txlege Republicans are doing to avoid expanding medicaid https://t.co/1ybTEMUjTn
— Ethan O. McBride (@EthanOMcBride) March 2, 2021
Expert weighs in on 3 new COVID-19 variants now emerging in Houston https://t.co/YbukV5zuoS
— Laredo Morning Times (@lmtnews) March 1, 2021
Texas guidance on COVID vaccines: “DON’T limit eligibility by citizenship status. There is no requirement that a person be a citizen to receive the vaccine." @LUPE_rgv https://t.co/Ahw5c67idl
— NBC Latino (@NBCLatino) February 28, 2021
Last week, our producer Davis Land headed out from his neighborhood in Houston to talk with people trying to restore their homes after a devastating winter storm knocked out power for so many Texans. It was nearly 80 degrees -- a huge change from a couple of weeks back, when many Texans were shivering under coats and blankets, waiting out a deep freeze and a utility shutdown. But after the cold let up, what was left behind was a mess of plumbing: burst pipes and sagging walls full of leaking water. There simply aren’t enough hands to do the work.
Nearly 24,000 people have applied for rent relief from the city and county https://t.co/iKms5OLs6P via @houstonchron
— Matt Schwartz (@SchwartzChron) March 2, 2021
A Texas father whose family was nearly stabbed to death and other victims of anti-Asian racism early in the pandemic share how they're coping a year later. A recent wave of new attacks has Asian American advocates pushing for solidarity. https://t.co/cbaZWO059n
— The Associated Press (@AP) March 2, 2021
"UT needs rich donors who love The Eyes of Texas more than they need one crop of irresponsible and uninformed students or faculty who won't do what they are paid to do"
— Kate McGee (@McGeeReports) March 1, 2021
Emails show wealthy alumni supporting “Eyes of Texas” threatened to pull donationshttps://t.co/w6TpTFR5ga
Last week, Jerry Jones lined his pockets while working-class Texans froze.
— Austin DSA (@austin_DSA) February 28, 2021
For that, he wins the distinction of being Austin DSA's Class Enemy of the Week. Read the full story here:https://t.co/jamz9Y9YQZ
Frozen to death. Poisoned by carbon monoxide. Trapped in home fires. Dead from crashes on icy roads.
— Krista M. Torralva (@KMTorralva) March 1, 2021
Texas is trying to count the winter storm death toll.
“We’ll probably never have a really accurate number,” the Dallas medical examiner said.https://t.co/na3JwBZFln
If you’re struggling with thoughts of suicide please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-8255. If you are in Harris County you can also call 713-221-6000 or 911. You are not alone, we are here to help. #hounews https://t.co/GWCsUsFIE4
— HCSOTexas (@HCSOTexas) March 1, 2021
Latest list of candidates in the #TX06 special election, ahead of tomorrow's 5 p.m. filing deadline: pic.twitter.com/ywea5qsFVd
— Patrick Svitek (@PatrickSvitek) March 2, 2021
THREAD:#TX06 could flip from red to blue — here's how.
— Daniel Friend (@DanielJFriend) March 1, 2021
Democrats have been eyeing the seat for the past few elections, but under normal circumstances, that's a fairly unrealistic target.
If he wins on Election Day, he’ll become San Antonio’s first openly gay city councilman. https://t.co/cX6cFsl8UB
— San Antonio Current (@SAcurrent) February 27, 2021
— El Arroyo (@ElArroyo_ATX) February 28, 2021